Iย couldnโt get Emilyโs face out of my mind, but I hadnโt looked at the picture closely enough to recall every detail of her features. Her eyes had been green. Her hair was strawberry blonde, like sunlight through amber.ย I remembered the wreath of flowers on her head but not her hairโs length. No matter how hard I tried to visualize her face, the only other things I could remember were that sheโd been laughing and that sheโd looked right at the camera, head-on.
โAvery.โ Oren spoke from the front seat. โWeโre here.โ
Hereย was the Hawthorne Foundation. It felt like it had been an eternity since Zara had offered to show me the ropes. As Oren exited the car and opened my door, I registered the fact that, for once, there wasnโt a reporter or photographer in sight.
Maybe itโs dying down, I thought as I stepped into the lobby of the Hawthorne Foundation. The walls were a light silvery-gray, and dozens of massive black-and-white photographs hung on them, seemingly suspended midair. Hundreds of smaller prints surrounded the larger ones.ย People.ย From all over the world, captured in motion and moments, from all angles, all perspectives, diverse along every dimension imaginableโage and gender and race and culture.ย People. Laughing, crying, praying, playing, eating, dancing, sleeping, sweeping, embracingโeverything.
I thought about Dr. Mac asking me why I wanted to travel.ย This. This is why.
โMs. Grambs.โ
I looked up to see Grayson. I wondered how long heโd watched me taking in this room. I wondered what heโd seen on my face.
โIโm supposed to meet Zara,โ I said, fending off his inevitable attack. โZara isnโt coming.โ Grayson walked slowly toward me. โSheโs
convinced that you are in need ofโฆย guidance.โ There was something about
the way he said that word that slid past every defense mechanism I had and straight under my skin. โFor some reason, my aunt seems to believe that guidance would be best received coming from me.โ
He looked exactly as he had the day Iโd met him, down to the color of his Armani suit. It was the same light, liquid gray as his eyesโthe same color as this room. Suddenly, I remembered the coffee table book Iโd seen in Tobias Hawthorneโs studyโa book of photographs, with Graysonโs name on the side.
โYou took these?โ I breathed, staring at the photos all around me. It was a guessโbut Iโd always been a good guesser.
โMy grandfather believed that you have to see the world to change it.โ Grayson looked at me, then caught himself staring. โHe always said that I was the one with the eye.โ
Invest. Create. Cultivate.ย Nashโs explanation of their childhood came back to me, and I wondered how old Grayson was the first time he held a camera, how old he was when he started traveling the world, seeing it, capturing it on film.
I wouldnโt have pegged him as the artist.
Irritated that Iโd been tricked into thinking about him at all, I narrowed my eyes. โYour aunt must not have noticed your tendency to make threats. Iโm betting she also didnโt know about the background check on my dead mother. Otherwise, there is no way she could have come to the conclusion that Iโd prefer working withย you.โ
Graysonโs lips twitched. โZara doesnโt miss much. And as for the background checksโฆโ He disappeared behind the front desk and reappeared holding two folders. I glared at him, and he arched a brow. โWould you prefer I kept the results of my searches from you?โ
He held out one folder, and I took it. Heโd had no right to do thisโto pry into my life or my momโs. But as I looked down at the folder in my hand, I heard my motherโs voice, clear as a bell, in my head.ย I have a secret.
โฆ
I flipped open the folder. Employment records, death certificate, credit report, no criminal background, a photographโฆ
I pressed my lips together, trying desperately to stop looking at it. She was young in the picture, and she was holding me.
I forced my eyes to Graysonโs, ready to unleash on him, but he calmly
handed me the second folder. I wondered what heโd found out about meโif there was anything in this folder that could possibly explain what his grandfather had seen in me. I opened it.
Inside, there was a single sheet of paper, and it was blank.
โThatโs a list of every purchase youโve made since inheriting. Things have been purchased for you butโฆโ Grayson dipped his eyes toward the page. โNothing.โ
โIs that what passes for an apology where youโre from?โ I asked him.
Iโd surprised him. I wasnโt acting like a gold digger.
โI wonโt apologize for being protective. This family has suffered enough, Ms. Grambs. If I were choosing between you and any one of them, I would choose them, always and every time. Howeverโฆโ His eyes made their way back to mine. โI may have misjudged you.โ
There was something intense in those words, in the expression on his faceโlike the boy whoโd learned to see the worldย sawย me.
โYouโre wrong.โ I flipped the folder closed, turning away from him. โI did try to spend some money. A big chunk. I asked Alisa to find a way to get it to a friend of mine.โ
โWhat kind of friend?โ Grayson asked. His expression shifted. โA boyfriend?โ
โNo.โ I answered. What did he care if I had a boyfriend? โA guy I play chess with in the park. He lives there. In the park.โ
โHomeless?โ Grayson was looking at me differently now, like in all his travels, heโd never encountered anything quite like this. Like me. After a second or two, he snapped out of it. โMy aunt is right. Youโre in desperate need of an education.โ
He started walking, and I had no choice except to follow, but I refused to stay in his wake, like a duckling toddling after its mother. He stopped at a conference room and held the door open for me. I brushed past him, and even that split second of contact made me feel like I was going two hundred miles an hour.
Absolutely not.ย That was what I would have told Max if she were on the phone. What was wrong with me? Grayson had spent most of our acquaintance threatening me.ย Hatingย me.
He let the conference room door close behind him, then continued walking to the back wall. It was lined with maps: first a world map, then
each continent, then broken down by countries, all the way down to states and towns.
โLook at them,โ he instructed, nodding toward the maps, โbecause that is whatโs at stake here. Everything. Not a single person. Giving money to individuals does little.โ
โIt does a lot,โ I said quietly, โfor those people.โ
โWith the resources you have now, you can no longer afford to concern yourself with the individual.โ Grayson spoke like this was a lesson heโd had beaten into him.ย By whom? His grandfather?ย โYou, Ms. Grambs,โ he continued, โare responsible for the world.โ
I felt those words like a lit match, a spark, a flame.
Grayson turned to the wall of maps. โI deferred college for a year to learn the ropes at the foundation. My grandfather assigned me to make a study of modes of charitable giving, with an eye to improving ours. I was to make my pitch in the coming months.โ Grayson stared hard at the map that hung even with his eyes. โNow I suppose that I will be making my pitch to you.โ He seemed to be measuring the pace of his words. โThe foundation conservatorship has its own paperwork. When you turn twenty-one, itโs yours, just like everything else.โ
That hurt him, more than any of the terms of the will. I thought about Skye referring to him as the heir apparent, even though she insisted that Jameson had been Tobias Hawthorneโs favorite. Grayson had spent his gap year dedicated to the foundation. His photographs hung in the lobby.
But his grandfather chose me.ย โIโmโโ
โDonโt say that you are sorry.โ Grayson stared at the wall a moment longer, then turned to face me. โDonโt be sorry, Ms. Grambs. Be worthy of it.โ
He might as well have ordered me to be fire or earth or air. A person couldnโt be worthy of billions. It wasnโt possibleโnot for anyone, and definitely not for me.
โHow?โ I asked him.ย How am I supposed to be worthy of anything?
He took his time replying, and I found myself wishing that I were the kind of girl who could fill silences. The kind who laughed with abandon, flowers in her hair.
โI canโt teach you how toย beย anything, Ms. Grambs. But if youโre willing, I can teach you a way of thinking.โ
I pushed back the memory of Emilyโs face. โIโm here, arenโt I?โ
Grayson began to walk down the length of the room, passing map after map. โIt mightย feelย better to give to someone you know than a stranger, or to donate to an organization whose story brings a tear to your eye, but thatโs your brain playing tricks on you. The morality of an action depends, ultimately and only, on its outcomes.โ
There was an intensity in the way he spoke, the way he moved. I couldnโt have looked away or stopped listening, even if Iโd tried.
โWe shouldnโt give because we feel one way or another,โ Grayson told me. โWe should direct our resources to wherever objective analysis says we can have the largest impact.โ
He probably thought he was talking over my head, but the moment he saidย objective analysis, I smiled. โYouโre talking to a future actuarial science major, Hawthorne. Show me your graphs.โ
By the time Grayson finished, my head was spinning with numbers and projections. I could see exactly how his mind workedโand it was disturbingly like my own.
โI get why a scattershot approach wonโt work,โ I said. โBig problems require big thinking and big interventionsโโ
โComprehensive interventions,โ Grayson corrected. โStrategic.โ โBut we also have to spread our risk.โ
โWith empirically driven cost-benefits analyses.โ
Everyone had things they found inexplicably attractive. Apparently, for me it was suit-wearing, silver-eyed guys using the wordย empiricallyย and taking for granted that I knew what it meant.
Get your mind out of the gutter, Avery. Grayson Hawthorne is not for you.
His phone rang, and he glanced down at the screen. โNash,โ he informed me.
โGo ahead,โ I told him. โTake it.โ At this point, I needed a breatherโ from him, but also fromย this. Math, I understood. Projections, I could wrap my mind around. But this?
This was real. This was power.ย One hundred million dollars a year.
Grayson answered his phone and left the room. I walked the perimeter, looking at the maps on the walls, memorizing the names of every country, every city, every town. I could help all of themโor none. There were people out there who might live or die because of me, futures good or bad that might be realized because of my choices.
What right did I even have to be the one making them?
Overwhelmed, I came to a stop in front of the very last map on the wall. Unlike the others, this one had been hand-drawn. It took me a moment to realize that the map was of Hawthorne House and the surrounding estate. My eyes went first to Wayback Cottage, a small building tucked in the back corner of the estate. I remembered, from the reading of the will, that Tobias Hawthorne had given lifetime occupancy of this building to the Laughlins.
Rebeccaโs grandparents, I thought.ย Emilyโs.ย I wondered if the girls had come to visit them when they were small, how much time theyโd spent on the estateโat Hawthorne House.ย How old was Emily the first time Jameson and Grayson laid their eyes on her?
How long ago did she die?
The door to the conference room opened behind me. I was glad that Grayson couldnโt see my face. I didnโt want him to know that Iโd been thinking aboutย her.ย I made a show of studying the map in front of me, the geography of the estate, from the northern forest called the Black Wood to a small creek that ran along the western edge of the estate.
The Black Wood.ย I read the label again, the rush of blood through my veins was suddenly deafening.ย Blackwood.ย And there, in smaller letters, the winding body of water was labeled, too. Not a creek. The Brook.
A brook, on the west side of the property. Westbrook. Blackwood. Westbrook.
โAvery.โ Grayson spoke behind me.
โWhat?โ I said, unable to fully tear my mind from the mapโand the implications.
โThat was Nash.โ
โI know,โ I said. Heโd told me who was on the other end of the line before heโd answered.
Grayson laid a hand gently on my shoulder. Alarm bells rang in the back of my head. Why was he being so gentle? โWhat did Nash want?โ
โItโs about your sister.โ